Fool-for-Christ 15th century

Venerable Isidore the Fool-for-Christ of Rostov

d. 1474

Also known as Isidore Tverdislov

A man of German and wealthy birth who, embracing Orthodoxy, forsook all and lived as a homeless fool-for-Christ at Rostov, dwelling in a hut of branches and hiding great gifts of prayer and wonderworking.

Feast Day
May 14
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Isidore, Fool-for-Christ and Wonderworker of Rostov

Life

Isidore of Rostov, surnamed Tverdislov, was a fool-for-Christ who lived and died in the Russian city of Rostov in the fifteenth century. By the accounts preserved in the synaxarion he was of Western and well-to-do background, born in the German lands to wealthy parents and raised in the Latin confession. Embracing the Orthodox faith, he gave away his inheritance, took up the staff of a wanderer, and at length settled at Rostov, where he assumed the difficult ascetic path of holy foolishness.

At Rostov he built himself a crude hut and lived without shelter from filth, snow, rain, and cold, enduring every outrage while concealing great gifts of unceasing prayer and wonderworking beneath an outward show of folly. He is surnamed Tverdislov, "Constant of Word," from his manner of speaking. He reposed in 1474, and the Church of the Ascension was later raised over his grave, where his relics are venerated. He is commemorated on May 14, and is distinct from the Martyr Isidore of Chios honored the same day.

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Western birth and conversion

According to the tradition recorded in the Orthodox calendar, Isidore was born in the German lands, by some accounts near Brandenburg, to a wealthy family and was raised in Roman Catholicism. From his youth he is said to have led an unsullied life and shown a compassionate understanding. The sources do not specify where he received the Orthodox faith, but having embraced it he distributed his wealth to the poor and, desiring the Kingdom of God, left his home to live as a pilgrim, traveling through many lands and cities before coming to Russia.

The fool-for-Christ at Rostov

Settling at Rostov, Isidore built a rickety hut of branches for himself and chose the manner of life that the Apostle Paul describes when he speaks of the apostles as fools for Christ's sake. By night he gave himself to unceasing prayer, allowing himself little sleep; by day he wandered the streets and marketplaces of the city in voluntary foolishness, bearing insults and hardship. Beneath this hidden life the synaxarion relates that he received the grace to work miracles.

Repose and veneration

Isidore reposed in 1474. By tradition his death was made known when an unusual fragrance spread through the city near his hut. A church of the Ascension of the Lord was built at the place of his burial in Rostov, and his relics rest there as a source of healing. Later accounts relate that a stone church replaced the earlier wooden chapel in the sixteenth century and that a shrine was set over his tomb in the nineteenth.

Notes

Distinct from the Martyr Isidore of Chios (same day).

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints